Firefox 3 is arriving today, and brings with it a whole host of lovely new features that I’ve grown to love using the betas and release candidates these last few months.
Some of the features I love in particular:
- The “awesome bar” (a new aspect of the address bar) gives me a central location to not only search my history but also my bookmarks and tags (see the new feature on those.) I can start to type “opendns” and not only will I find any pages I’ve visited recently with opendns in the URL or page title, but also any of my bookmarks with that word in it and bookmarks with that tag. It makes getting from A to B just that much faster.
- The all-new Bookmarks system is a huge improvement over not only Firefox 2 but every other offering out there on the browser market right now. The new system uses a SQLite database to store your bookmarks, reducing potential instances of data corruption and speeding up read/write time over the traditional .HTML file.
The new UI makes things faster from the user experience, too. Want to bookmark a page your on? No problem! Just hit the star. The page is instantly bookmarked and sorted un an “unfiled” section of your bookmarks so you can manage it later. If you want to customize your bookmark right now, hit that start again and a little dialog pops up allowing you to name your link, tag it, describe it and so forth. All of this additional meta information is used for the “awesome bar” and really allows you to customize your browsing experience.
- Firefox 3 is fast! The new version of the Gecko rendering engine they’ve implemented is noticeably peppier than previous versions. And I can’t forget to the mention the drastically reduced memory consumption- Firefox 3 beats out every other browser on the market in that regard.
- It’s more secure; Mozilla has really beefed up their phising and malware detection system, and what’s more have made it much more obvious in the user interface when you’re browsing a secure site and when you’re not.
- Firefox finally has a native look on every platform. Now it doesn’t matter what OS you’re running the browser on, it’ll fit right in and look great. OS X, Windows 2000/XP, Windows Vista and Linux all have great default UIs that won’t make you cringe anymore.
So, download Firefox 3 today, and tell ‘em Evan sent ya’.
And hey, while you’re at it why not switch to OpenDNS? It makes your browsing experience that much safer, not to mention faster. Like Firefox it’s free, and unlike Firefox it doesn’t even require a download to set up. Just set your DNS servers to 208.67.222.222 and 208.67.220.220 and you’re done. Not sure how to do that? OpenDNS has a great guide on on the matter right here.



